No,
We Didn’t Make That Up. He Wants Alligators, Snakes and Spikes Piercing Human
Flesh.
“Privately,
the president had often talked about fortifying a border wall with a
water-filled trench, stocked with snakes or alligators, prompting aides to seek
a cost estimate. He wanted the wall electrified, with spikes on top that could
pierce human flesh. After publicly suggesting that soldiers shoot migrants if
they threw rocks, the president backed off when his staff told him that was
illegal. But later in a meeting, aides recalled, he suggested that they shoot
migrants in the legs to slow them down. That’s not allowed either, they told
him.”
Shooting
migrants in the legs? Alligators? Piercing human flesh?
To
whom have Americans handed the keys to our government? How is Donald Trump
qualified to be president of the United States?
This
is policy-making in the White House? This reflects a logical government
approach to resolving a real problem? How is this not representative of what
any other country would face an accusation of human rights abuses, to say
nothing of border violence and plain old criminal behavior?
Indeed, as the Times article outlined—it was an excerpt from an upcoming book by the Times’s Michael Shear and Julie Hirschfeld Davis—these ideas from Trump were the result of frustration with laws and protocols running smack into Trump’s personal desires to fulfill bad campaign promises. And, within a short time, Trump’s anger resulted in the replacement of a number of the officials in the room who had tried to temper his thinking.
Of course, denies he said it
Trump said he never proposed moats with alligators, as if that would eliminate
the craziness of the report.
Trump’s
threats to stop all traffic along the southern border remains a possibility
still, though lots of financial and immigration folks all see severe economic
setbacks for doing so.
In the meantime, the perceived threats of a massive immigration problem have receded as the government has proceeded with policies to force Mexico to hold migrants and agreements have been reached with three Central American governments to return migrants directly to those nations.
In the meantime, the perceived threats of a massive immigration problem have receded as the government has proceeded with policies to force Mexico to hold migrants and agreements have been reached with three Central American governments to return migrants directly to those nations.
In
interviews that The Times said involved more than a dozen White House and
administration officials involved in the events last March, the extremes of
presidential seat-of-the-pants policy-making became clear.
Apparently,
those in the room at the time included Kirstjen Nielsen, the homeland security
secretary who was dumped in the following days, Secretary of State Mike Pompeo,
Kevin K. McAleenan, the Customs and Border Protection chief who replaced
Nielsen, Stephen Miller, the White House immigration whisperer, Mick Mulvaney,
the acting chief of staff and Jared Kushner, the president’s
son-in-law, among others.
In
succeeding days, those advisers steered Trump towards more efforts by Mexico to
stop immigration efforts and an overhaul of personnel in Homeland Security.
‘The
Country Is Full’
In
one telling anecdote, Trump apparently told a follow-up meeting in front of
border agents that they should be turning away migrants at the border.
Reported The Times: Trump said, the message to you is: keep them all out, Every single one of them. The country is full. And yet, after the president left the room, McAleenan told the agents to ignore the president. You absolutely do not have the authority to stop processing migrants altogether, he warned.
Reported The Times: Trump said, the message to you is: keep them all out, Every single one of them. The country is full. And yet, after the president left the room, McAleenan told the agents to ignore the president. You absolutely do not have the authority to stop processing migrants altogether, he warned.
Since
then, of course, the government has decided to deny green cards for immigrants
deemed likely to become “public charges,” and announced plans to allow
immigrant families to be detained indefinitely.
Those actions have been challenged in court. Trump has also threatened tariffs on Mexico unless immigrant efforts are contained, and Homeland Security has moved to restrict legal asylum and refugee numbers. In addition, Trump took $3.6 billion from military construction accounts to start building his proposed Wall.
Those actions have been challenged in court. Trump has also threatened tariffs on Mexico unless immigrant efforts are contained, and Homeland Security has moved to restrict legal asylum and refugee numbers. In addition, Trump took $3.6 billion from military construction accounts to start building his proposed Wall.
One
thing never discussed in all of this, of course, is American values inviting
and thriving from immigration.
At
least there is no moat with alligators.